The neighborhood suddenly became a popular spot about two years ago, apparently after a photo taken in a particular angle showing Mount Fuji in the background of a local convenience store, became a social media sensation.
The neighborhood suddenly became a popular spot about two years ago, apparently after a photo taken in a particular angle showing Mount Fuji in the background of a local convenience store, became a social media sensation.
I used to live in Japan and around 50% of Japanese were sweet, friendly, welcoming and accommodating. 35% purposefully ignored or avoided me. And 15% were snide, bitter, racist, exclusionary, angry, rude assholes who can get fucked and/or need to go traveling to see that the world doesn’t revolve around them. One of the sweet ones even shouted down, literally, one of the assholes who harassed me in the subway.
Come at me weebs. Except with “that’s literally any country” bullshit. Japan is unique in this way.
Not a weeb but I think that’s most places if you don’t look or speak like them. I’m American but I’m brown, west coast, bigger cities there’s enough brown people I don’t stand out. Down south, rural small towns, most of Europe those reactions and percentages sound about right.
Welcome to being a minority.
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Every country is unique in this way.
Every human is unique in this way.
I didn’t have that experience in Korea. I encountered maybe two people who seemed to be actively racist or exclusionary against me as a foreigner, so it would be a fraction of a percent.
First, what does that have to do with the article, or was this a response to something accidentally set at parent level?
I’ve been in Japan for almost 9 years now and that’s not really my experience. I’ve been generally just treated like a normal human as I would anywhere else. Yeah, there are racist fuckheads, but 15% seems like a lot in my experience.